U.'IC Library
Sorlal:; E9pt.
Box 870
rr- n- t f i T T . ,T. r; .
Sunday Flick
Tonight's Sunday Cinema is
the Academy Award-winning
La Strada." This story of ev
ery man'g loneliness stars
Anthony Quinn, Giulietta Ma
sina. and Richard Baehart.
mm 1
Barnard At War
DTII cartoonist Chip Ber
nard continues his war with
the Carolina nurses. See his
latest attack on page 2.
The South' s Largest College Newspaper
Vol. 74, No. 22
CHAPEL HILL NORTH CAROLINA SUNDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1965
Founded February 23, 1893.
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'Melodrama' -
P Leader Blasts
Legislative Session
By ANDY MYERS
DTII Staff Writer
Majority Floor Leader
Don Wilson charged yes
terday that Thursday's ses
sion of Student Legislature
was a "rehearsed melo
drama." The Student Party leader re
ferred to a speech by Rep.
Sharon Rose (of Spencer
Dormitory) which called for
the recall of Student Body
President Paul Dickson.
A petition which began cir
culating Friday demanding a
recall election prompted a re
buttal statement yesterday
from Wilson. Dickson is out of
town for the weekend.
In a statement to the DTH,
Wilson further charged The
Daily Tar Heel with holding
its news deadline for two
hours "in order to have a last
minute front page replay of
the whole event."
"Shallow Scheme"
He said: "I sincerely believe
that honest assessment of all
the facts, and the reflection of
thoughtful minds will recog
nize the shallowness of this
scheme and reject it!"
Wilson said he would pre
sent a petition this afternoon
to Vice President Britt Gor
don, the speaker of the legis
lature, calling for a special
session of SL at 7:30 p.m. to
morrow "in order that SL
might get back to work at
hand."
The recall petition is still
circulating around campus,
but the number of signatures
attached to it is unknown.
Almost 1,900 names will be
required to hold a recall elec
tion. If it is successful, the
petition will force Dickson to
have the elections board con
duct the election before Oct.
19.
The petition reads:
TO PAUL DICKSON III,
PRESIDENT OF THE STU
DENT BODY:
"We the undersigned here
by petition you to direct the
elections board to hold a re
call election for the office of
President of the Student Body.
We further petition that this
election be held on or before
Tuesday, Oct. 19, 1965."
Like General Assembly
According to Wilson, last
Thursday's session of SL re
sembled "the General Assem
bly in the closing session of
the spring of 1963," referring
to the method ot rusning me
speaker ban law through with
out debate.
Wilson accused Miss Rose of
making her statement to infer
that "President Dickson does
not even have the support of
his own party."
However, when informed of
Wilson's charge, Miss Rose
stated, "I made it very clear
Thursday night that I did not
intend to speak for the Student
Party.
"As I said, I spoke only for
the constituients of my dormi
tory, three - fourths of whom
signed the petition asking the
president to resign."
Miss Rose continued, "If
the other legislators would
start representing their con
stituents instead of just their
party, we'd get a lot more
done."
Wilson said that Gordon, in
his "brazen refusal to enter
tain debate . . . constituted a
gross abuse of procedure and
prerogatives of the Chair."
He called the procedure
"the profaning of due proc
ess," regretting that the issue
had been opened again.
Miss Rose apologized for the
student body for the fact that
"certain leaders of my party,
in order to disguise the:r own
irresponsibility, have resorted
to vicious, scurrilous and per
sonal attacks."
Wilson
Text Of Statement
This is the full text of the
statement released by Student
Party Floor Leader Don Wil
son: Last Thursday night the
Student Legislature witnessed
a rehearsed melodrama which
looked like a chapter of the
"Thad Eure Guidebook for
Passage of A Speaker Ban
Law."
The directors of this little
theatrical farce even fore
warned The Daily Tar Heel
which held its news deadline
for two hours in order to have
a last minute front page re
play of the whole event.
With numerous pieces of im
portant legislation already re
leased from committees for
floor action, including nearly
200 presidential committee ap
pointments, the Vice Presi
dent and Speaker of the Stu
dent Legislature didn't even
bother to prepare an agenda
for a session which he knew
would never see legislative ac
tion. Following chaplain Bill Pur
dy's reading of the "fallen
man" parable from Job 14:
4-10, the Vice President rec
ognized Rep. Sharon Rose to
address a partially unsuspect
ing body. Her statement, how
ever sincere, opened with a
disclaimer of all but altruistic
interests and followed with a
biting indictment and a plea
for "non - partisan" action,
reminiscent of countless utter
ances by Don Carson and oth
er members of the UP heir
archy. Speaker Britt Gordon then
stifled any rebuttal by im
mediately recognizing Roger
Davis, who was not even a
member of the body, for a
motion to adjourn. Davis's
motion to adjourn came af
ter he had moved onto the
SP side of the chamber so as
to appear to add a second SP
voice to the issue
Speaker Gordon called for
the "Ayes," and the UP
Minority shouted approval.
Gordon simultaneously
brought down the gavel and
adjourned the body without
even calling for the Nays."
This brazen refusal to en
tertain debate, which consti
tuted a gross abuse of proce
dure and prerogatives of the
Chair, ran like a video-tape
replay of the action of the
General Assembly in the clos
. ing session of the spring of
1963. How is it that this stu
dent body, whose leaders have
steadfastly deplored the disre
gard for due process and leg
islative debate among free
men by which the Speaker
Ban was enacted, now must
be subjected to emulation of
those tactics by a small, wil
ful group who find that ex
ample expedient?
The intended implication of
Rep. Rose's statement is
clear. Her statement was de
signed to indicate that Presi
dent Dickson does not even
have the support of his own
party. Miss Rose, though an
SP legislator, did not support
West Speaks To Wesley
On Faith, Foreign Policv
"The Christian Faith and
Foreign Policy" will be the
topic of discussion when Char
les West, professor of Chris
tain Ethics at Princton Theo
logical Seminary, speaks on
the Sunday Evening Sympos
ium of the Wesley Foundation
at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow.
West is a former resident
lecturer at the Eccumenical
Institute of the World Coun
cil of Churches in Bossey,
Switzerland, and is presently
a member of the editorial
board of the journal "Chris
tainity and Crisis."
He has written two books
"Communism and the Theo
the SP ticket last spring. The
UP did not even run a candi
date against Miss Rose when
she ran for a legislative seat
last spring. In no uncertain
terms I want it understood
that Rep. Rose does not speak
for the Student Party or the
Student Party legislative cau
cus. My only true regret, outside
of the profaning of due proc
ess, is the fact that this issue
has been reopened. A check of
the leading newspapers in the
state reveals that this issue
has not been mentioned for
over a week. The record
stands clear as to who placed
this issy,e before the public
previously. A complete docu
mentation of what happened
Thursday night appeared in
the Friday morning Raleigh
News and Observer as well as
the Charlotte Observer. There
has been a deliberate cam
paign to get the present issue
into the state press in order
to further inflame the situa
tion. Excuse me if I regard
certain pronouncements of
concern for state publicity as
so much hypocrisy.
The fact that no independent
group of students had initiated
a recall in three weeks
seemed a significant indica
tion of student acceptance of
President Dickson's decision.
A desire to be about the bus
iness of student government
for the year ahead appeared
to be evident among the ma
jor part of the student body.
Part of that business of stu
dent government consisted of
a major program of progress
ive legislation which was be
fore the Student Legislature
Thursday night, including
twenty - eight bills introduced
by the Dickson Administration
and the Student Party Caucus
on September 30. This pro
gram has been stifled by rais
ing anew this controversy.
Legislation to implement the
resounding mandate on Cam
pus Radio was shoved aside
in Thursday night's hasty ad
journment. . Legislation ap
propriating $6,000 to the Resi
dence Colleges, bills which will
eventually provide for color
televisions in every residence
hall, fraternity, or sorority
which takes part in the pro
gram, and bills to provide rec
ognition for excellence in
teaching, have been relegated
to second place in importance
so that another full-scale con
troversy could be forced on
the student body at this time.
The eagerness of an ambit
ious few to take advantage of
a situation in the twilight of
its importance, is itself an act
so irresponsible as to crack
through the thin veneer of
false morality which has been
contrived to gloss over the
purposes of this move for pub
lic consumption.
I sincerely believe that hon
est assessment of all the
facts, and the reflection of
thoughtful minds will recog
nize the shallowness of this
scheme and reject it!
logians," which deals with the
impact of Communism on the
minds of theologians of today.
and "Outside the Camp,"
which deals with the matter
of "what God is doing."
Di-Phi Meeting
The Di-Phi -Senate will hold
a closed executive session
next Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. on
the top floor of New West.
All senators are required to
attend and those who do not
are subject to fines.
The purpose of the meet
ing cannot be disclosed be
fore the specified date.
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Danny Talbott (arrow) circles right end In Carolina's first quarter touchdown drive.
DTH Photo By Ernest Robl.
Tar Heels Win Redemption
With Decision Over State
By ED FREAKLEY
DTH Staff Writer
RALEIGH The Tar Heels
redeemed themselves yester
day milking the Cows with a
first quarter touchdown and a
fourth quarter field goal turn
ing States' creani sour.
Carolina came cack into the
barnyard following a week in .
the out house after 'ailing to
Virginia 21-17 last Sa irday.
The traditional bat ? be
tween the sister insLaitions
was played before a packed
20,600 people in Riddick pas
ture. The game was part of Con
solidated University Day. Stu
dents from Carolina, State,
Greensboro and Charlotte Col
lege attended.
Mary King, a beautiful Car
olina blond, won the title of
Miss Consolidated University.
She was given roses and
crowned in half time ceremon
ies. Zacky Murphy, also a
Carolina Product, was second
runner - up and Julia Lassiter,
of State, was first runner-up.
Band Beaten
As it came out Carolina won
the ball game and the UNC
gals stomped the rest of the
Consolidated U. contenders.
However, the Tar Heels suf
fered one loss. State's band
was the whole musical show,
the marching Tar Heels would
have done better if they hadn't
gone.
Beeial Patrols Protect CamBiis
By JOHN H. JENNRICH
Associate Editor
About 1:30 a.m. the night be
fore the State game. I met
Chapel Hill Patrolman H. P.
Smith half-way between GM
and the planetarium.
We stopped and talked for
a minute. He was working
special duty for the Univer
sity, trying to keep Cow Col
lege boys from painting signs
on Carolina buildings or Silent
Sam.
Patrolman Smith invited me
to join him in his car parked
on the sidewalk next to GM.
He turned on the heater and
I asked him about his job.
This was the third year he
had been working special
duty, he said, and he some
times thought the University
was spending an awful lot of
money on protection. But it
was like insurance. The week
before the State and Duke
games, the University would
hire several police to patrol
the campus all night. It was
cheaper than cleaning paint
off buildings.
He said he didn't mind the
long hours. He has a wife and
four kids and he could use the
extra money.
From where we were sitting,
we could see Silent Sam. GM,
the sun dial and the plane
tarium all likely places for
the traditional paint splashing
Getting back to the football
game, it was a battle of hard
knocks. Both defensive units
played good ball.
The pads were pounding
from one end of the field to
the other. Even so there were
only two fumbles, one by each
team. State recovered theirs
and ours.
Offensively UNC clicked on
three or four occasions. On the
touchdown drive they stayed
on the ground most of the way
going over tackle and sweep
ing the ends.
A couple of other drives
were halted by the hard play
of State's forward wall.
Long March
After the ball game had
been tied early in the
fourth quarter the Tar Heels
took the kick off and marched
67 yards to the State 13. Once
again the Cows came up from
the pasture and held.
From there scrambling
quarterback Danny Talbot,
who said early in the season
that State was one team Caro
lina was definitely going to
beat, kicked a perfect 30 yard
field goal.
The old pig skin went right
through the barn doors to
bring home the hay.
But the defensive 11 still
had there job to do, and do
it, they did.
State drove to the Carolina
23 before being slung back
that precedes the annual foot
ball rivalry.
Painted Campus
Smith said one time two cou
ples came over from the State
campus. The car dropped one
boy and girl off at the More
head lot and drove to the Bell
Tower. The couple had a small
can of paint with them and
they strolled past Silent Sam,
the Old Well, Wilson library
and on over to the Bell Tow
er. And everywhere they had
walked, they left their mark.
Luckily, police had spotted
the N. C. State car near the
Bell Tower and had noted the
license number. Shortly there
after, the police realized the
campus had been hit and they
put out a call to look for the
State car. Some alert police
man in Glen Lennox spotted
the two couples as they were
heading back to Raleigh and
brought them back to the
Chapel Hill police station.
They had paint on their
hands and egg on their faces.
It was almost 2:30 and the
campus was quiet. A car pull
ed into the More head lot, but
it was just another policeman
bringing Smith some coffee. He
offered me a cup and we con
tinued talking.
Last Year
Last year, he said, some
students from Ehringhaus saw
someone on the water tower
into the mud hole. On fourth
down they attempted a 39
yard field goal for a tie. It
missed, wide to the right.
And so it ended. Carolina
has won two games, both on
the road, and lost two, both at
home.
They played a good ball
game yesterday, not great,
but good. They didn't quit.
From bums to heros in sev
en days, from the out house to
the palace. But the toughest
part of the season lies ahead,
Notre Dame and Georgia. And
Maryland Maryland next
week in Kenan palace. A
place that turns from a pal
ace to an out house mighty
quick.
Gemini Film
Monday Nite
"The Four Days of Gemini
4" an NASA film which cov
ers the recent Gemini Flight
of Astronauts White and Mc
Divitt, will be shown on Mon
day evening at 8 p.m.; in Car
roll Hall auditorium. This is
to be an all - campus show
ing, with the student body and
interested townspeople invited
to attend.
near the medical complex.
Soon there were 200 screamin'
Carolina fans at the base of
the tower. Chief Beaumont, the
campus police and the Chapel
Hill police soon arrived and
cleared away the crowd. Some
of the police wanted to scale
the tower and see who was up
there, but Beaumont said it
wasn't worth the risk. The po
lice waited over an hour,
walking around the tower and
shining spotlignts at the top.
No one saw any sign of move
ment on the tower and after a
while, every one left.
But next morning, there was
BEAT CAROLINA splashed
across the side of the tower.
Smith said that of course
Carolina students did the same
thing. "Once we hit Duke on
a Thursday night," he said,
"and they got us Friday."
It was 3:30. I thanked Smith
for the coffee and conversa
tion and started to leave. He
got out to walk around the
buildings and as we parted,
he told me he wished people
had a better image of police.
He said, "People see an offi
cer doing his duty and call
him a dirty name. But police
are human, just like everyone
else, and they're only doing
the job people pay them to
do."
Smith had said earlier that
he would get off special duty
Talbott Kicks FG.
Keeps Old Vow
By PAT STITII
DTH Sports Editor
RALEIGH North Carolina
quarterback Danny talbott
kept a vow he made 13
months ago here Saturday,
leading his team to a 107
victory over N. C. State.
He wasn't spectacular it
wasn't that kind of game
but he ran a smart attack, he
was the game's top total gain
er, he scored Carolina's only
touchdown, he booted the ex
tra point and then with just
5:51 left on the clock, he kick
ed a perfect 30 yard winning
field goal.
And in doing so he kept a
vow to beat State that he
made with himself more than
a year ago.
It was this same Wolfpack
that picked off Talbott's first
varsity pass on opening day
last fall and returned it 45
yards for a touchdown. And
it was State that intercepted
another of his passes late in
the game to set up their win
ning score.
He vowed then that today
would be a day or reckoning
and it was.
Both teams played tough,
hard-hitting, heads up foot
ball. And the game wras ac
tually closer than even the
three point spread indicated.
Because after Talbott put
Carolina ahead and the ball
changed hands twice, State
launched a desperate drive
drive that almost paid off in
a tie.
With less than two minutes
to go the Wolfpack got the
ball on their own 48-yard-line
and in five palys moved it to
the Carolina 23.
From there Harold Deters,
who had kicked two field
goals to beat Wake Forest 13
11 two weeks ago, attempted
a 39 yarder from an angle to
the right and missed.
That's how close it was.
North Carolina completely
dominated the first quarter,
rolling up 87 yards to State's
minus three and scoring its
only touchdown.
The second period was more
of the same until quarterback
YDC Executive Committee
Endorses Highway Bonds
Governor Dan Moore's road
bonds issue gained the sup
port of the UNC Young Demo
cratic Club executive commit
tee Friday. The roup voted
to actively work towards
passage of the issue, which is
to be decided by a vote of the
people on Nov. 2.
The executive committee
discussed program plans for
the remainder of the year.
Tom Bolch, club president,
said that Robert L. Huffman
of Monroe, president - elect
about four and that he had
to be back on the street at
nine. And he had been work
THE LONELY VIGIL A policeman sits in his patrol car
on the UNC campus Friday night. The extra patrols were
put on duty to protect the University from possible damage
by other students' pranks.
Charlie Noggle burst through
the right side of the Carolina
line for a 33 yard gain to the
State 49, where Mike Horvat
nailed him from behind.
From that point on the two
teams played on equal terms,
with the Wolfpack getting off
a 13 play 40 yard drive late
in the third quarter for their
only score and Carolina com
ing right back with a 14 play
67 yard march that resulted
in Talbott's field goal.
Neither team intercepted a
pass and there was but one
lost fumble that break went
to State.
Running back Max Chap
Chapman, who emerged the
game's leading rusher, fum
bled on the Carolina 40 yard
line after a four yard gain
midway in the third period.
State took the ball at that
point and drove it on in for
its only score.
North Carolina Coach Jim
Hickey, who looked like a
man who had just emerged
from a game of Russian rou
lette with his head intact,
praised both teams.
He called it a typical North
Carolina - N. C. State game
hard fought and close. He
singled out running back Max
Chapman and sophomore full
back Tom Lampman for spe
cial praise.
N. C. State actually missed
two opportunities for a tie.
The Wolfpack took a short
28 yard punt from Bill Ed
wards late in the second pe
riod and defensive back Fred
Combs returned it 14 yards to
UNC's 33 yard line. Six plays
later their drive stalled on
Carolina's 14 and on a fourth
State elected to go for broke.
Page Asby's pass to half
back Shelby Mansfield in the
end zone was high and the
gamble failed.
After the game State Coach
Earle Edwards admitted that
he wished he had gone for the
field goal.
"It's just a feeling you
get," he said. "I though we
could put a quick one in there
and we decided to take that
chance."
of the North Carolina YDC,
has agreed to present the
first program of the year for
the Carolina YDC.
Huffman, who was presi
dent of the local club when
he attended Law School in
Chapel Hill, will address the
club on Thursday, Oct. 21.
The executive committee
also discussed plans for a mix
er in Greensboro with mem
bers of the UNC-G YDC, to
be held in the near future.
ing special duty since Wed.
And he was humanly tired,
"just like everyone else."